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Non-Tech : The ENRON Scandal -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (4759)1/8/2003 5:27:01 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
"CBS has been doing things lately that make me happy."
I agree!

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Selling The Iraq War To The U.S.
SIXTY MINUTES

cbsnews.com

Dec. 6, 2002

(CBS) Politicians have had to sell the
public on going to war since Colonial
times, but they never had the arsenal of
advertising and communications
techniques the Bush administration is
using to sell a possible war on Iraq. Bob
Simon reports on those techniques and
those employed by the elder Bush prior to
the 1991 Gulf War.

Simon reminds viewers that a horrible
story spread widely by the first Bush
administration prior to the Gulf War about Kuwaiti babies pulled from
incubators by invading Iraqis turned out not to be true. The current Bush
administration may be also misinforming the public in its efforts to justify a
possible second war with Saddam Hussein.


One example of misinformation, according to physicist and former weapons
inspector David Albright, was the Bush administration's leak to the media in
September about Iraq's attempt to import aluminum tubes which
administration officials claimed were headed for Iraq's nuclear program.

"I think it was very misleading," says Albright, who directs the Institute for
Science and International Security. Albright says the tubes could be possibly
used for a nuclear program, but were more suited to conventional weapons
production. Government experts thought that too, Albright tells Simon, but
administration officials "were selectively picking information to bolster a
case that the Iraqi nuclear threat was more imminent than it is, and, in
essence, scare people."

Simon's report examines the administration's use of Madison Avenue to
produce an ad campaign aimed at improving the image of America in the
Muslim world. He also interviews a former CIA agent who investigated the
oft-mentioned report that hijacker Mohammed Atta met with an Iraqi
intelligence official in Prague several months before the deadly attacks on
9/11.

Despite a lack of evidence that the meeting took place, the item was cited by
administration officials as high as Vice President Dick Cheney
and ended
up being reported so widely that two-thirds of Americans polled by the
Council on Foreign Relations believe Iraq was behind the terrorist attacks of
9/11.

© MMII, CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reser